Abstract

A systematic study of the shift and linewidth of the Raman peak at of anatase nanopowders, produced by a flame aerosol technique, is here presented. The analysis was performed as a function of the crystal domain size and of the degree of oxidation. In the nanopowders, a clear contribution of the stoichiometry defects to the peak shift was evidenced, while the peak width seems to be less affected by the oxygen content. The Raman peak behavior due to size reduction has been interpreted in the framework of a phonon quantum confinement model. A critical review of the different approaches to this model, adopted in the literature to explain the behavior of the anatase Raman spectra as a function of the domain size, is presented. In particular, the hypothesis of a three-dimensional isotropic model for the dispersion relations is discussed. This analysis evidences general limits in the application of the phonon confinement model to the study and characterization of nanoparticles and nanostructured materials, showing how an uncritical use of the confinement theory can yield distorted results.